It's also a Windows dialog box; not that hard to photoshop since the background is NOT gradient shaded; solid color with a common font.
EDIT: Upon closer inspection, there is a very light gradient change, but in the areas where the text is, it's changing a whopping 1 value (read: the red, green, or blue channel is being changed by 1, so subtle you'd barely notice it).
End Edit
I HIGHLY doubt that it's legit.
MATH TIME!
Original image (for comparison purposes posted here so it's easier to see where I'm getting the numbers from):
44,791,767,094 = bytes on disc, right next to the 9000 GB figure.
Divide by 1024 =
43741960.052734375 Kilobytes.
Divide by 1024 =
42716.7578639984130859375 Megabytes
Divide by 1024 =
41.71558385156095027923583984375 Gigabytes....
But wait, shouldn't that somehow be 9000 since we went from bytes to gigabytes? *gasp* It should be. But it's not.
I guess I find this more interesting though:
Bytes: 44,791,767,094
Files: 44,791,767,797,638
See the problem yet? Like how each file would have to be smaller than 1 byte in order to have that many files?
But wait - what if windows was displaying the 9000 wrong and it really IS 9000GB of music?
9441.7 = GB the screenshot shows
Multiply by 1024 =
96,68,300.8 Megabytes
Multiply by 1024 =
9,900,340,019.2 Kilobytes
Multiply by 1024 =
10,137,948,179,660.8 Bytes
DIVIDE BY 44,791,767,797,638 = an average filesize of about .22 bytes (1/5th of a byte).
Even if it really is 9gb theres the problem that none of the files are big enough to contain any actual songs!
Sorry to have to break out the calculator and do my hand at busting that open. Was bored, and the numbers were WAY too out of whack to let go.
Oh, and I'm sitting on about 5gb of music here. 3 main bands with discographies (Iron Savior, Jag Panzer, Disturbed), and a few soundtracks thrown in from movies.